Problems With Paladino

What a week it’s been for Buffalo millionaire and New York gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino. After insulting every New Yorker who happens to be gay with his incredibly insulting comments, he has been forced to wiggle and squirm through the week trying to convince everyone that he doesn’t hate gay people. To prove that he isn’t a homophobe, Paladino publicly outed his nephew when he said that he (Paladino) couldn’t be a homophobe because he has a nephew who is gay. Hmm. I have a mom who is a woman so does that mean that I can denigrate and insult all women and not be a misogynist? No. It does not.

Gay New Yorkers are not the first people who Paladino has insulted. Lets not forget the racist email he found funny enough to spread back in the Spring and the incredibly insensitive comments he made on CNN opposing a woman’s right to choose even in cases of rape and incest.

This guy wants to be elected to an office that requires him to serve ALL New York Citizens and not just straight, white, religious men. New York is a wonderful mix of all walks of life and our governor needs to be someone who will fairly work for and respect (even when he or she disagrees with) all of us.

Paladino Makes Anti-gay Remarks, Blames Jews for His Remarks

Republican gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino told Orthodox Jewish leaders he doesn’t want children “brainwashed into thinking that homosexuality” is acceptable.

“I just think my children and your children would be much better off and much more successful getting married and raising a family,” said Paladino. His prepared remarks included this line: “I don’t want them brainwashed into thinking that homosexuality is an equally valid and successful option–it isn’t. There is nothing to be proud of in being a dysfunctional homosexual. That is not how God created us,” which turned into this: “That’s not how God created us and that’s not the example that we should be showing our children.”

Paladino’s Democratic opponent, Andrew Cuomo, seized on the remarks, which he called a display of “stunning homophobia and a glaring disregard for basic equality.” He went on, “These comments along with other views he has espoused make it clear that he is way out of the mainstream and unfit to represent New York.”

Paladino, sensing the gravity of his mistake, claimed later that he didn’t approve of all his comments, which, he said were suggested by the “hosts at the synagogue,”.

Carl Paladino Admits He Just Made Up That Thing About Andrew Cuomo Having an Affair

The following article is from nymag.com

Carl Paladino Admits He Just Made Up That Thing About Andrew Cuomo Having an Affair.

By: Dan Amira

Early on in the race for governor, Carl Paladino’s campaign admitted that he’d had an affair over ten years ago with an employee. The affair produced a daughter who Paladino kept secret from his wife until last year. The whole sordid tale was well known by the time Paladino’s wife spoke about the affair and love child with the Times and the Post last week. But soon reporters started to pry further into Paladino’s private life. His campaign alleges that a Post photographer placed his camera up against Paladino’s daughter’s bedroom window and “chased” her to a playground. The media was now taking way too much interest in Paladino’s decade-old affair, especially when, Paladino said, theyhadn’t reported at all on Andrew Cuomo’s affairWhat, Cuomo had an affair? everyone asked. That has never been alleged before by anyone. When the Post‘s Fred Dicker demanded proof — not an unreasonable request for someone lobbing such shocking accusations — Paladino claimed that “of course” he had it and it would be forthcoming “at the appropriate time.”

Apparently, that time is now. But the proof is … nothing.

Paladino, speaking from his Buffalo office, said he has been subjected to so many questions about his personal life that he recently questioned whether the media, in fairness, is also posing personal questions to Cuomo.

However, Paladino said, he wasn’t accusing Cuomo of having an extramarital affair.

“I’m sick and tired of people asking me about if I’ve had affairs,” Paladino said. “I was talking to [a reporter with Politico.com] and said ‘Why don’t you ask Andrew Cuomo if he has had extramarital affairs. It’s not that I was accusing him.”

Actually that’s not what happened, at all! Here’s what Politico’s Maggie Haberman says Paladinotold her in their interview on Tuesday:

Immediately after saying he was surprised the press was going after people’s children and saying, “They’re innocents,” Paladino volunteered, “Has anybody asked Andrew Cuomo about his paramours -” Caputo chimed in, “When he was married.” Paladino added, “When he was married or asked him why his wife left him or threw him out of the house? Has anybody ever done that?” ….

I asked if it was ever proven that something had happened with Cuomo, adding that we knew his wife had had an affair, and Paladino said, “Want me to go get affidavits from the women? Is that what you want?”

I asked if he knew who the women were and he said, “Three of the four.”

Well, we’re no experts on what constitutes an accusation, but that is definitely an accusation. A very specific one. And what about that evidence that he promised to Fred Dicker during their amazing shouting match on Wednesday? According to the Buffalo News:

In addition, Paladino misspoke Wednesday night when telling a New York Post reporter that he would provide proof of a Cuomo affair “at the appropriate time,” Paladino campaign manager Michael Caputo said today.

Paladino misunderstood the question he was being asked by New York Post reporter Fred U. Dicker, and the context of the question, Caputo said.

Dicker was very “in your face” and poking Paladino, Caputo said. Dicker, he said, was asking Paladino questions about an interview that appeared in Politico.com that Paladino had not seen.

A valiant effort, we guess, except that in an interview last night — one in which nobody was “in his face” — Paladino repeated his claim that “when we’re good and ready we’ll furnish” the proof of a Cuomo affair. It was apparently after this interview that the Paladino campaign decided to back down and pretend they had never started this unsubstantiated smear in the first place, despite all the evidence to the contrary.

The most bizarre part in all of this, though, may be that Paladino is now claiming that he has never even had an affair. In an interview with NY1 yesterday (he did a lot of interviews yesterday, none of which are helping him much), Paladino asked, “What affairs has [Cuomo] had? Obviously I haven’t had any.”

Put it all together and this is almost too much to comprehend. Publicly and repeatedly slandering your opponent and then pretending it never happened. Discussing the child you had with your mistress and then claiming you never had an affair. Not to mention telling anyone who gets on your bad side that they’re “off the Christmas-card list.” Is this a campaign for governor or some kind of mind-bending performance art? Are we on Punk’d?

Assemblyman Tim Gordon at New Lebanon Library

Assemblyman Tim Gordon will make a stop on his Hometown Tour at the New Lebanon Library on Thursday, September 23, from 11 am to 1 pm. This is an opportunity for members of the community to share their views and concerns with him.

WHEN:     Thursday, 9/23
TIME:       11:00 am to 1:00 pm

WAMC: Polls Open Today in New York Primaries

WAMC: Polls Open Today in New York Primaries (2010-09-14).

ALBANY, NY (WAMC) – Tuesday is primary day in New York, and among the top races are for the Republican nomination for Governor, with the two candidates in a dead heat, and a five way wild card race for the Democratic spot for Attorney General.

Tuesday’s primary races will come down to which campaigns have the best on the ground forces- field operations that have identified supporters and can actually get them to the polls Tuesday.

That effort will be particularly crucial in the GOP gubernatorial race. A Siena college poll, conducted in the final days of the campaign, shows Republican designee and former Congressman Rick Lazio neck and neck with Buffalo businessman and Tea Party associate Carl Paladino, who petitioned his way onto the ballot.

Paladino is leading among upstate voters, while Lazio is ahead in New York City and surrounding suburbs. In past elections, the Republican vote has come equally from the two regions of the state, says Siena’s Steve Greenberg. But he says with few voters expected at the polls, the vote could go either way.

“The Republican primary turnout is going to be somewhere around 20%,”
said Greenberg, who says the Democratic turn out could be in the “low teens”.

Five candidates are running for the Democratic slot for Attorney General, and the Siena poll shows two frontrunners, Nassau County DA Kathleen Rice and Manhattan State Senator Eric Schneiderman in a dead heat, with Schneiderman at 25% and Rice at 23%. The three other candidates are Sean Coffey, who is in third place, Assemblyman Richard Brodsky, and former State Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo.

As the race tightened the leading candidates grew negative in the final days of the race, Carl Paladino and Rick Lazio each ran ads accusing the other of being a liberal- hoping that label will be an anathema to conservative GOP voters.

The last days of the Attorney General’s race also featured attacks and counterattacks between the top two candidates. Kathleen Rice’s campaign sent out a statement to the media asking whether Schneiderman had “a Spitzer problem”. “No, not that problem”, the next line of the release states, and goes on to question Schneiderman’s transfer of hundreds of thousands of dollars of his personal wealth into the campaign. Schneiderman’s camp responded with flyers reminding Democratic voters that Rice used to be a Republican, and charging that she forced part time working mothers in the DA’s office to work full time or quit their jobs.

On Monday, both candidates received the support of law enforcement groups. Rice was endorsed by New York State Troopers, and the Nassau County Sheriff, Schneiderman was backed by the state’s prison guards.

Greenberg, with Siena, says the last minute charges, counter charges and endorsements are key, because there are more Democrats who remain undecided than support either of the two candidates, and there are three other candidates to choose from.

“29% of Democrats said, heading into these final few days, that they were undecided,” Greenberg said.

There are two other Republican primaries as well on Tuesday, for the chance to run against New York’s two US Senators- Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer.

Three are competing for a chance to challenge Democrat Gillibrand; Former Nassau County legislator Bruce Blakemen, former Congressman Joseph DioGuardi, and former Bear Stearns chief economist and Reagan and Bush White House appointee David Malpass.

Schumer’s two potential opponents are marketing consultant Jay Townsend and former CIA officer Gary Berntsen.

There are also some state Senate primaries that could gauge public anger agasint the Senate. Among them, Albany Senator Neil Breslin faces a primary challenger, as well as Buffalo Senator William Stachowski, and Senate Majority Leader Pedro Espada of the Bronx. But Greenberg, with Siena, warns- don’t read too much into the outcome of those contests just yet, because it’s a party primary, and “tends to bring out the most active and committed voters in this state”.

It will be the November election that determines whether the State Senate remains in Democratic hands, or reverts to Republican control. © Copyright 2010, WAMC